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The episode "Speed Buggy Went That-a-Way" was featured on the Warner Bros. Presents DVD compilation Saturday Morning Cartoons – 1970's Volume 1 and released on May 26, 2009. [43] As part of the Warner Bros. Home Entertainment's Archive Collection, the complete Speed Buggy series was made available on DVD as a four-disc set. [3]
The series was introduced as What a Cartoon! shorts. All shows from this point onward were broadcast on Cartoon Network. 52 episodes Cartoon Network 171 Johnny Bravo: Van Partible: 1997–2004: Seasons 1–3. Season 4 was produced by Cartoon Network Studios as a separate entity of its former parent company. The series was introduced as What a ...
Speed Buggy: February 6, 2001 June 1, 2014 ... Harry and His Bucket Full of Dinosaurs: November 23, 2005 ... Hanna-Barbera's Cartoon Corral: June 2, 2003 2005 [125]
The episode is a satire of how many classic Hanna-Barbera cartoons are rip-offs of one another (e.g. Scooby-Doo, Jabberjaw and Speed Buggy are all mystery-solving cartoons involving objects/animals as focal characters who can talk, and how certain members of each mystery solving team look like each other, like Shaggy, Clamhead and Mr. Tinker ...
Laff-A-Lympics is an American animated comedy television series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions.The series premiered as part of the Saturday-morning cartoon program block Scooby's All-Star Laff-A-Lympics, which consists of 24 episodes, on ABC on September 10, 1977. [1]
The New Adventures of Speed Racer; The New Adventures of Superman; The New Adventures of Zorro; The New Fred and Barney Show; The New Lassie; The New Scooby-Doo Movies; The New Shmoo; The New Woody Woodpecker Show; The New Yogi Bear Show; Newsround; Newsround Showbiz; Newsround Specials; The Next Big Thing; The Next Step; Nick Cope's Popcast ...
The Cartoon Cartoon Show. Pfish and Chip; Blammo the Clown; Eustace and Muriel; Gramps and his grandchildren; Larry and Steve; Godfrey and Zeek; Zoonatiks and Mr. Hackensack; Fat Cats (Louie and Elmo) Hard Luck Duck and Crocodile Harley; Pizza Boy and Tumbleweed Tex; Boid and Worm; Bloo, Simon, and Scully; The Ignoramooses (Sherwood and Pomeroy ...
Like a great deal of Hanna-Barbera's 1970s output, the format and writing for Jabberjaw was similar to that for Scooby-Doo, [3] Josie and the Pussycats and Speed Buggy. [4] The show also drew inspiration (in the use of a shark as a character) from the overall shark mania of the mid-1970s [5] caused by the then-recent film Jaws.